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Southeast Asia
Ex-Khmer Rouge Leader Admits Genocide
2003-12-30
A former Khmer Rouge leader expected to face a U.N. tribunal acknowledged Tuesday there is ``no more doubt left’’ that his regime committed genocide, the first admission of the communist group’s collective guilt.
A little late for the victims, though.
Khieu Samphan’s surprising statement in an interview with The Associated Press is a major step in the long overdue effort to bring to justice those responsible for the deaths of 1.7 million Cambodians during the ultra-leftist group’s 1975-79 rule. Many of the victims were executed; the rest died of starvation, disease and overwork in the Khmer Rouge’s attempt to create an agrarian utopia. Now, with an agreement on a tribunal earlier this month between U.N. and Cambodian officials, ex-Khmer Rouge leaders should soon face charges for the first time.
What a rush to judgment by an international tribunal!
A former head of state and one of the few top Khmer Rouge leaders still alive, Khieu Samphan, 72, is certain to be indicted. Speaking by telephone from his home, he apparently hoped to begin giving his version of Cambodia’s bloody history before his likely prosecution for genocide and crimes against humanity. He insisted he never ordered any killings - and claimed he only learned from a documentary two months ago about the extent of the Khmer Rouge’s crimes.
"I knew nothing! Nothing!"
``Everything has to go the trial’s way now, and there’s no other way,’’ he said. ``I have to prepare myself not to let the time pass away. But I also want the public to understand about me, too. I was not involved in any killings.’’
No, no! Certainly not!"
Until Tuesday, none of the Khmer Rouge’s top leaders had publicly accepted that the government committed genocide. But Khieu Samphan said he realized he could no longer ignore the Khmer Rouge’s atrocities after he saw a documentary about the notorious S-21 prison, presented to him by a Cambodian-French filmmaker, Rithy Pan. ``When I saw the film, it was hard for me to deny (the killings). There’s no more doubt left,’’ said Khieu Samphan, who lives in Pailin, 175 miles northwest of the capital, Phnom Penh.
Was it the field of skulls that gave it away?
``I was surprised, because I never thought it (the regime) went to that extent in its policies. S-21 was in the middle of Phnom Penh. It was clearly a state institution. It was part of the regime.’’
"We committed all sorts of other atrocities, but never anything like that!"
As many as 16,000 people are believed to have passed through the gates of the infamous prison but only 14 are thought to have survived. The prison is now the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum. None of the Khmer Rouge’s surviving leadership has faced justice. Many are infirm but - like Khieu Samphan - live and move freely in the country. Pol Pot, the regime’s supremo, died in 1998.
Only about 25 years too late.
After five years of negotiations, U.N. and Cambodian officials tentatively agreed this month on steps to set up the tribunal. But the court’s creation has been delayed by a lack of funds and by political instability after Cambodia’s inconclusive general elections left three parties jostling to create a coalition.
These are the guys who want to try Saddam, just as soon as they’re done in Cambodia, Rawanda and Bosnia.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan plans to launch an appeal in early February for contributions toward the tribunal’s $40 million operating budget. Sok An, the Cambodian government’s chief negotiator for setting up the court, has said its formalization will be ``addressed immediately’’ once a new legislature is formed. The other senior leader expected to face trial is Nuon Chea, the former Khmer Rouge’s ideologue, who also lives in Pailin. He and Khieu Samphan surrendered to the government in December 1998, just a few months before the capture of Ta Mok, the former Khmer Rouge army chief, which capped the final collapse of the movement. Ta Mok and Kaing Khek Iev, the S-21 prison’s chief, are now in prison.
But not in S-21. Wotta shame.
Posted by:Steve White

#4  U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan plans to launch an appeal in early February for contributions toward the tribunal’s $40 million operating budget.

Well what a surprise! Here's a buck, Kofi. Go buy a bullet and put it in the back of the fucker's head.
Posted by: tu3031   2003-12-30 9:07:54 PM  

#3  Cam Ranh. Make it Cam Ranh.

I wonder if the Li-Li Bar is still there?
Posted by: Fred   2003-12-30 8:39:51 PM  

#2  It was a Civil War.
There were no dominos.
Bush=Hitler.

The question is... Will Bush open Wheelus or Cam Rahn Bay first?
Posted by: Shipman   2003-12-30 5:55:48 PM  

#1  For information concerning the S-21 prison (it once was a high school) see this site on the Tuol Sleng Museum. Very Gruesome and not for the faint of heart. I wonder of any of this will be shown as evidence....
Posted by: CrazyFool   2003-12-30 5:38:08 PM  

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